Lotic Communities & Animals

- Freshwater Ecology

As mentioned in previous pages, the running water environment offers numerous microhabitats that simulate favourable conditions for many types of animals to successfully succeed the freshwater lotic community. As with plants, animals in this ecosystem have also underwent ongoing evolutionary adaptations to better suit this running water environment.

As with plants and their rooting structure, animals have also adapted to cope with the current of the stream.

Some of these animals are sessile, meaning they are immobile and fixed to the one place. These animals are usually small, and include the protozoans and some freshwater sponges. These animals either remain attached to the mass of a plant or the water bank surface or rock. They usually obtain their food via tentacles which branch out into the flowing water and form a catchment area that can trap microscopic organisms (such as plankton) that is floating downstream.

As much as these sessile animals have developed adaptations to prevent being washed downstream, they are not thought to be one of the important pillars of the freshwater community. Over time when biotic and abiotic factors affect the landscape of the ecosystem over time, the location of these animals may not be as favourable as it once was, and they are unable to correct this due to their immobile nature. With this in light some animals have developed adaptations that allow them to travel through the water without being inhibited in same spot.

animals have developed some of the following adaptations over time that helps them cope with the conditions in hand:

Suckers - These suckers attach themselves to a surface that leeches them into position and can also assist movement in any given direction.

Hooks / Claws - These sharp objects can dig into any given object and allow the animal to cling to a position or claw their way around the surface.

Body flattening - This adaptation can allow the animal in the water bear less of the brunt of the force of water moving downstream, therefore reducing it as an inhibitor of their movement. This also allows these animals to enter confined areas (such as under stones) that may present a useful environment for them to live in.

Streamlining - Just like man-made transport, animals who have underwent streamlining adaptations on their external appearance means that less resistance is presented by the running water when the animal attempts to move.

Flight - Some animals have adaptations allowing them to fly, removing themselves from the force of the current at ground level and enabling them to move upstream more easily if needs be.